Langimage
English

intermittently-validated

|in-ter-mit-tent-ly-val-i-dat-ed|

C1

🇺🇸

/ˌɪntərˈmɪtəntli ˈvælɪˌdeɪtɪd/

🇬🇧

/ˌɪntəˈmɪtəntli ˈvælɪˌdeɪtɪd/

irregularly confirmed

Etymology
Etymology Information

'intermittently-validated' originates from the combination of 'intermittent' and 'validate'. 'Intermittent' comes from Latin 'intermittere', where 'inter-' meant 'between' and 'mittere' meant 'to send'. 'Validate' comes from Latin 'validare', meaning 'to make strong or confirm'.

Historical Evolution

'Intermittent' evolved from the Latin 'intermittere' through Old French 'intermettre', and 'validate' evolved from Latin 'validare' through Middle English 'validaten'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'intermittent' meant 'to send between', and 'validate' meant 'to make strong'. Over time, 'intermittently-validated' came to mean 'checked at irregular intervals'.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

checked or confirmed at irregular intervals.

The data was intermittently-validated to ensure accuracy.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/07/22 16:16